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Invasive intracranial aspergillosis secondary to intranasal corticosteroids
  1. M B LEWIS,
  2. B HENDERSON
  1. Department of Neurology, Pinderfields Hospital, Aberford Road, Wakefield WF1 4DG, Yorkshire, UK
  1. Dr M B Lewis, Department of Neurology, St James’s University Hospital, Leeds LS9 7TF, Yorkshire, UK. Telephone 0044 113 2433144; email m-k-lewis{at}emailmsn.com

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Intranasal corticosteroids are widely available; we describe a serious and previously unreported complication of their use. A 41 year old Asian woman was admitted acutely, after two generalised seizures. She described a 2 year history of anosmia, nasal stuffiness, and rhinorrhoea which was diagnosed 12 months previously, by both her general practitioner and an ear, nose, and throat surgeon, as allergic rhinitis, with patch testing confirming allergy to house dust mite II, although no imaging was performed at this time.

This was treated with the topical nasal steroid spray Flixonase (fluticasone propionate 50 mcg/spray). The remainder of the history was unremarkable and she had not been back to Asia for 6 years.

General examination was normal and there were no focal neurological signs, although she was rather confused and disinhibited.

Full blood count; urea and electrolytes; liver function tests, serum calcium; random blood glucose; thyroid function tests; serum angiotensin converting enzyme; blood cultures; cytoplasmic pattern (c-) antineutrophilic antibodies (ANCA) and perinuclear (p-) ANCA; an ECG; and chest radiography were all normal.

An EEG showed only diffuse slowing, consistent with a postictal state. Brain CT showed an ill defined area of reduced attenuation in the right frontal lobe, with no contrast enhancement, and a soft tissue mass in the paranasal and sphenoid sinuses, which was eroding through the base of the skull.

Brain MRI (fig 1) showed swelling of the right frontal pole …

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